(1 of )Rancho Cotate High School wide receiver and cornerback Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, All-Empire large schools defensive football player of the year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

(2 of )Rancho Cotate High School wide receiver and cornerback Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, All-Empire large schools defensive football player of the year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat) Taylor-Yamanoha shows the University of Louisville Cardinal on his gloves, where the senior plans to attend and play for next year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

(3 of )Rancho Cotate High School wide receiver and cornerback Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, All-Empire large schools defensive football player of the year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

(4 of )Rancho Cotate High School wide receiver and cornerback Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, All-Empire large schools defensive football player of the year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

(5 of )Rancho Cotate High School wide receiver and cornerback Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, All-Empire large schools defensive football player of the year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

(6 of )Rancho Cotate High School wide receiver and cornerback Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, All-Empire large schools defensive football player of the year. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

(7 of )Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, second from left, laughs with his teammates during a break in varsity football practice at Rancho Cotate High School in Rohnert Park on Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015. (PD File)

All-Empire football: Rancho Cotate's Chris Taylor-Yamanoha is large schools defensive player of year

PHIL BARBER

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | February 5, 2016

ALL-EMPIRE LARGE SCHOOL FOOTBALL

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR

Jack Newman, Analy, Jr.

DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR

Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, Rancho Cotate, Sr.

COACH OF THE YEAR

Rick Krist, Petaluma

FIRST-TEAM OFFENSE

QB: Jordon Brookshire, Cardinal Newman, Jr.

RB: Lucas Dentoni, Petaluma, Sr.

RB: Michael Ortola, Cardinal Newman, Sr.

RB: Jose Ramirez, Piner, Sr.

WR: Ross Simmons, Analy, Jr.

WR: Schuyler Van Weele, Analy, Sr.

OL: Brandon Boccaleoni, Rancho Cotate, Sr.

OL: Reed Palmer, Cardinal Newman, Sr.

OL: Jamon Roberts, Cardinal Newman, Sr.

OL: Alex Tancreto, Windsor, Sr.

OL: Ben Upton, Petaluma, Sr.

FIRST-TEAM DEFENSE

DL: Mike Elgin, Piner, Sr.

DL: Andrew Floerke, Casa Grande, Sr.

LB: Mitchell Bruning, Windsor, Sr.

LB: Sam Fletcher, Windsor, Sr.

LB: Josh Groesbeck, Maria Carrillo, Sr.

LB: Isaac Kangas, Analy, Sr.

LB: Anthony Spallino, Windsor, Sr.

DB: Nic Petri, Casa Grande, Sr.

DB: Danny Shelton, Rancho Cotate, Sr.

DB: Damien Wallace, Cardinal Newman, Jr.

DB: Luke Wheless, Petaluma, Sr.

P: Gunner Mefferd, Rancho Cotate, Sr.

SECOND-TEAM OFFENSE

QB: Brenden White, Petaluma, Sr.

RB: Bryant Herrguth, Healdsburg, Sr.

RB: Osiris Zamora, Analy, Jr.

WR: Kalei Aukai, Santa Rosa, Jr.

WR: Anthony Rea, Windsor, Sr.

TE: Elijah Chirco, Casa Grande, Sr.

OL: Kaulana Ako, Cardinal Newman, Sr.

OL: Andrew Fossell, Analy, Sr.

OL: Spencer Macon, Maria Carrillo, Sr.

OL: Soni Misi, Rancho Cotate, Sr.

OL: Blake Stibi, Windsor, Sr.

K: Sean Nagle, Maria Carrillo, Sr.

SECOND-TEAM DEFENSE

DL: Dante Burrell, Ukiah, Sr.

DL: Jordan Cabico, Cardinal Newman, Sr.

DL: Jonah Kim, Maria Carrillo, Sr.

LB: Nicholas Bautista, Montgomery, Sr.

LB: Casey Goddard, Petaluma, Sr.

LB: Scott Simpson Jr., Piner, Sr.

LB: Spencer Torkelson, Casa Grande, Jr.

DB: Fhestus Chomba, Maria Carrillo, Sr.

DB: Kaleo Garrigan, Casa Grande, Sr.

DB: Kyle Johnson, Analy, Jr.

DB: Saturday Phiakeo, Piner, Sr.

Unfortunately, the best one-on-one matchup in the Redwood Empire never materialized this season. It couldn’t have, because there was no way for Chris Taylor-Yamanoha, the cornerback, to cover Chris-Taylor Yamanoha, the wide receiver.

What a battle it would have been.

The Rancho Cotate senior was undoubtedly the top receiver in the area in 2015. But he was every bit as good on the other side of the ball. In fact, his future may be as a defensive back, and that’s where he is being honored today — as the Large School Defensive Player of the Year.

“He’s a shutdown corner but people didn’t throw the ball at him,” Rancho coach Ed Conroy said of Taylor-Yamanoha. “He led the team in interceptions, but it was foolish to throw at him because he’d pick it off. He was huge on defense for us because he allowed us to shade teams the other way.”

Taylor-Yamanoha wound up with seven interceptions, which is a bit absurd when you consider how infrequently opposing quarterbacks tested him.

“He’s the guy in this county who affected the game more than anybody else, because he could go for a touchdown at any time,” Cardinal Newman coach Paul Cronin said. “We were scared to death of Taylor-Yamanoha, because he can do so much with the ball.”

Taylor-Yamanoha’s offensive production was stellar: 82 catches for 1,473 yards and 23 touchdowns. He and Cougars quarterback Gunner Mefferd formed a sometimes-unstoppable combination. And it wasn’t like Taylor-Yamanoha was feasting on lesser competition. His best game (13 receptions, 239 yards, 3 touchdowns) came in a playoff loss to Analy, the Sonoma County League champion. His second-best game (13 catches, 179 yards, 3 touchdowns) was in a loss to Newman, the North Bay League champion.

Week after week, the Rancho Cotate coaches asked Taylor-Yamanoha to cover the opponent’s top receiver, wherever that kid lined up.

“It was really cool, knowing they put their trust in me to do that, that they thought I could shut anyone down,” Taylor-Yamanoha said. “During the offseason I was working with kids from all over the country. It gave me more confidence, that if I get to go against anyone I will not back down or be scared.”

As Conroy suggested, the Cougars not only assigned Taylor-Yamanoha to the No. 1 receiving target, they tended to rotate their safeties to the other side of the field, figuring CTY would keep things locked down on his side.

And every once in a while, the opposing quarterback would tempt fate. Maybe it was just the habit of looking for his top receiver. Maybe they mistakenly thought Taylor-Yamanoha was getting gassed from playing both ways.

“My dad (Cougars assistant coach Rudy Yamanoha) said he notices sometimes I look like I’m tired on defense,” Taylor-Yamanoha revealed. “So they go after me, and that’s when I get my picks. He asked me, ‘Do you do that on purpose?’ And I said, ‘No, I’m just coming off of offense and maybe I’m moving a little slower.’ ”

Through all of the accolades and big plays, Taylor-Yamanoha remained low-key, even-keeled and quiet to the point of humility. “He gets fired up inside, but he’ll never express that,” Conroy said. “He’ll get an interception or make a nice catch, and he’ll get a little excited. Then he’ll come back to the bench. He might have just scored the winning touchdown, and it’s, OK, get a drink of water and let’s go. Sometimes you’re more excited for him than he is.”

Taylor-Yamanoha will play at the University of Louisville, but he isn’t entirely sure of his position. At first, coaches there told him he’d likely play defensive back. Now, amidst a recruiting class heavy on the DBs, they might try Taylor-Yamanoha at wide receiver.

Back home, we all know how tough that decision can be.

You can reach Staff Writer Phil Barber at phil.barber@pressdemocrat.com.